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The Signs You’re Being Quietly Fired

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Changes to compensation, work conditions, work responsibilities and leadership communication can all be signs of quiet firing. Although quitting your position may be the only way out, consider strategic and more rational ways to deal with quiet firing situations.

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The term quiet quitting has been trending on platforms such as LinkedIn and even BBC news. It is the term used for people who complete work responsibilities without going above and beyond. This looks like logging out at 5 pm and not seeking additional tasks or projects. Quiet quitting tends to happen when people do not feel valued, or they are under-compensated.

On the flip side is a new trending topic – quiet firing.

Employers are considering trimming their workforce for many reasons, however, rather than simply firing people or paying the expenses of redundancies, research suggests that companies may increasingly be turning to the subtle approach of quiet firing.

The purpose of quiet firing is to create a hostile work environment that encourages underperforming people to leave voluntarily. There are a variety of reasons for leaders to start quiet quitting including dubious potential, conflict avoidance and cost-saving, however, sometimes it is unintentional and caused by mismanagement.

The concept of quiet firing is a non-controversial, non-confrontational way to convince employees to leave, however, it has a lot of downsides. Aside from making employees feel demoralised, incompetent, unappreciated, depressed, and isolated, it can affect your whole team and business.

Here are some strong warning signs that quiet firing is taking place:

Changes related to compensation

Changes related to working conditions

Changes related to work responsibilities

Changes related to leadership communication

What can you do if you feel you are being quietly fired?

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  • Pay cuts

  • Preventing an employee from earning more by not offering extra work or overtime

  • Not providing expected yearly bonuses or raises

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  • Changing work hours or being inflexible

  • Increasing workload to unmanageable levels

  • Forcing employees to relocate

  • Taking away perks

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  • Reassigning important job responsibilities to other employees or worse, new employees.

  • Demoting an employee, or changing their job description

  • Not assigning them promised new opportunities or responsibilities

  • Setting unreasonable performance targets

  • Giving undesirable or misaligned responsibilities

  • Preventing an employee from a well-deserved promotion

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  • Not discussing career trajectory or providing regular and constructive feedback, prohibiting a person from progression

  • Evaluating an employee unfairly or constantly criticising their work without constructive feedback

  • Ghosting employees such as regularly cancelling meetings or not replying to emails.

  • Not giving employees credit for their work, or worse, giving credit to others.

 

Experiencing quiet firing can be extremely difficult and it’s only natural that people would want to leave a company after experiencing any of these changes.

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In a Harvard business review study, they found that more than 40% of respondents who had experienced quiet firing simply tried to ignore the problem. One of the first things people will want to do when they feel as though they are being quietly fired is quit, however, sometimes it is best to be strategic about these situations and make the right choices.

Be rational

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Before jumping to conclusions about being quietly fired, try to rationalise and gain an accurate understanding of the situation before reacting. Ask yourself whether you are overreacting or overanalysing the situation. Are unfavourable changes only targeting you or is everyone in the company/ team being affected? Could it be a bad management issue rather than an issue with you?

 

Document your experiences

Keep a record of the good and the bad. Keep a written note of your achievements and accomplishments so you can demonstrate the value you have added to the company in terms of tangible, quantifiable outcomes.

Equally important, you need to keep written records and evidence of any mistreatment. This should include emails, reports, and written feedback when you’ve felt unappreciated, excluded, or undervalued.

 

Communicate your concerns

Like with any situation, communication is key. If you’re concerned about a situation have an open and honest conversation about how you feel. Focus on tactical ways around how the situation can be made better, rather than simply complaining.  

 

Protect your wellbeing

Experiencing quiet firing is stressful and can take a toll on mental health. Acknowledge how you’re coping and reach out to friends, family and HR if needs be.

 

Negotiate

If it’s clear that you’re being pushed out of the business and you’ve decided it would be best to leave, don’t simply turn in your resignation.

If they want you out and you’ve decided to leave, you hold the power. Negotiate what you want in a frank discussion with your manager. This could include severance pay or job support.

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